Lead Opinion
f 1.
Wisconsin courts have long applied a community caretaker exception to the warrant requirement under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. In this case, Kenneth M. Asboth, Jr., asks us to decide whether law enforcement officers' warrantless seizure of his car was a reasonable exercise of a bona fide community caretaker function. He also asks us to determine whether Colorado v. Bertine,
I. BACKGROUND
f 2. Asboth was a wanted man in November 2012. He was a suspect in the armed robbery of a Beaver Dam bank, and there was an outstanding probation warrant for his arrest. When police received a tip that he was at a storage facility in Dodge County, outside the City of Beaver Dam, both the Dodge County Sheriffs Department and Beaver Dam Police responded by sending officers to the storage facility to apprehend him.
¶ 3. The sheriffs deputy arrived first and saw a person matching Asboth's description reaching into the back seat of a car parked between two storage sheds. Drawing his weapon, the deputy ordered the person to come out of the vehicle with his hands up. Asboth,
¶ 4. After Asboth's arrest, his car remained parked at the storage facility. None of the arresting officers asked Asboth if he could arrange to have the car moved. Although the car sat in the middle of the alley between two storage sheds, space remained available for a vehicle to maneuver around it and drive through the alley. The car, however, entirely blocked access to one storage unit, and it impeded access to several others. When the officer ran a check of the car's registration, it identified the car's owner as not Asboth but a different person with a City of Madison address.
¶ 5. Both the Beaver Dam Police Department and the Dodge County Sheriffs Department had policies for officers to follow when deciding whether to impound a vehicle. The Beaver Dam policy provided:
Any officer having a vehicle in lawful custody may impound said vehicle. The officer will have the option not to impound said vehicle when there is a reasonable alternative; however, the existence of an alternative does not preclude the officer's authority to impound.
Deputies of the Dodge County Sheriffs Department are authorized to arrange for towing of motor vehicles under the following circumstances:
When any vehicle has been left unattended upon a street or highway and is parked illegally in such a way as to constitute a definite hazard or obstruction to the normal movement of traffic;
[[Image here]]
When the driver of a vehicle has been taken into custody by a deputy, and the vehicle would thereby be left unattended;
[[Image here]]
When removal is necessary in the interest of public safety because of fire, flood, storm, snow or other emergency reasons;
[[Image here]]
Unless otherwise indicated, the deputy always has the discretion to leave the vehicle at the scene and advise the owner to make proper arrangements for removal.
¶ 6. Because the impound lot at the Dodge County Sheriffs Department was full, the officers and deputies agreed to tow the car to the Beaver Dam police station. Consistent with police department procedures, officers conducted an inventory search of the seized vehicle at the police station. The search turned up several items that the department held for safekeeping: a video game system, a cell phone, an MP3 player, keys, and an orange water bottle containing green leafy material. In the spare tire compartment
¶ 7. The State charged Asboth with armed robbery,
¶ 8. Asboth filed a motion for reconsideration. Relying on State v. Clark,
(1) Both the Dodge County Sheriffs Department and the Beaver Dam Police Department's written policies favor [ed] impoundment....
*653 (2) The vehicle was parked on another individual's property, not legally parked on a public street.
(3) The vehicle was blocking access to more than one of the business's storage lockers and impeding travel by other customers through the complex.
(4) There were valuable items in the vehicle including electronics.
(5) Defendant was arrested while in possession of the vehicle, and was actually observed reaching into the vehicle.
Asboth pled no contest, and the circuit court imposed sentence of 10 years initial confinement followed by 10 years extended supervision.
¶ 9. In the court of appeals, Asboth challenged the circuit court's denial of his suppression motion, but he limited his argument to the constitutionality of the seizure of the car. State v. Asboth, No. 2015AP2052-CR, unpublished slip op., ¶ 1 (Wis. Ct. App. Sept. 29, 2016). Specifically, Asboth argued that the warrantless seizure was unconstitutional because it was not conducted pursuant to sufficiently detailed standardized criteria or justified by a bona fide community caretaker purpose. Id. Assuming without deciding that Bertine requires law enforcement officers to follow standardized criteria when seizing a vehicle, the court of appeals concluded that the Dodge County Sheriffs Department's policy applied and authorized the seizure. Id., ¶¶ 11, 20. Turning to Asboth's community caretaker argument, the court of appeals first rebuffed Asboth's contention that an investigatory purpose negated the bona fide community caretaker justification for the seizure, then concluded that the public need to move the car outweighed Asboth's privacy interests. Id., f ¶ 24, 44. Accordingly, the court of appeals affirmed the circuit
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 10. We review an order granting or denying a motion to suppress evidence as a question of constitutional fact, which requires a two-step analysis. State v. Matalonis,
III. DISCUSSION
¶ 11. The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that "[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated" and that "no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause." Article I, § 11 of the Wisconsin Constitution likewise provides that "[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures shall not be violated" and that "no warrant shall issue but upon probable cause." Because the Fourth Amendment and Article I, § 11 provide substantively identical protections, we have historically interpreted this section of the Wisconsin
f 12. "A seizure conducted without a valid warrant is presumptively unreasonable." State v. Brereton,
¶ 13. Specifically, law enforcement officers may conduct a warrantless seizure without violating the Fourth Amendment when performing community caretaker functions — those actions "totally divorced from the detection, investigation, or acquisition of evidence relating to the violation of a criminal statute." State v. Kramer,
(1) whether a search or seizure within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment has occurred; (2) if so, whether*656 the police were exercising a bona fide community caretaker function; and (3) if so, whether the public interest outweighs the intrusion upon the privacy of the individual such that the community caretaker function was reasonably exercised ....
Matalonis,
f 14. There is no dispute that a seizure of As-both's car occurred within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment, so this case turns on the second and third steps of Wisconsin's community caretaker test. Asboth contends that the seizure satisfied neither the second nor the third steps because an overriding investigatory purpose negated the officers' bona fide community caretaker justification for moving the car, and the public interest in seizing his car did not outweigh his privacy interest in leaving it at the storage facility. Further, he insists that the seizure was not reasonable because it was not governed by standardized criteria sufficient to satisfy Bertine. We therefore consider in turn the second and third steps of the community caretaker test.
A. Bona Fide Community Caretaker Function
¶ 15. The community caretaker exception to the warrant requirement accounts for the multifaceted nature of police work. Kramer,
¶ 16. In South Dakota v. Opperman,
¶ 17. Citing Opperman's subsequent analysis of the constitutionality of an inventory search, the primary issue in that case, Asboth asserts that the officers' interest in investigating him as a potential suspect in the bank robbery predominated over any bona fide community caretaker function they performed by moving the car. Furthermore, focusing on Opperman's examples — impoundment following an ac
¶ 18. For multiple reasons, we conclude that the officers possessed a bona fide community caretaker justification for impounding Asboth's car. First, if left unattended, the car would have inconvenienced a private property owner and customers at the storage facility by impeding the beneficial use of the property. Cf. United States v. Brown,
f 19. Second, because Asboth was a suspect in a crime who also allegedly violated the terms of his probation, he likely faced a lengthy detention, and the possibility of a concomitant lengthy abandonment of the car counseled in favor of its removal from the premises. See United States v. Coccia,
f 20. Finally, the registered owner of the car at the time of Asboth's arrest was someone other than Asboth. With no one else immediately present claiming ownership or otherwise available to take possession of the vehicle, the possibility existed that officers would need to make arrangements to reunite the car with its registered owner. Moreover, the protective function of impoundment described above carries no less force (and perhaps more) for an absent registered owner than it would if officers knew that Asboth owned the car.
f 21. Collectively, the functions of removing an obstruction inconveniencing the property's users and protecting an arrestee's property during his detention,
B. Reasonableness of the Seizure
1. Standard Criteria
¶ 22. Before we consider the public interest in the impoundment along with Asboth's competing privacy interest, we first address Asboth's argument that the seizure of his car was unreasonable because it was not impounded according to standard criteria. In particular, he contends that in Bertine the United States Supreme Court established that an impoundment will be constitutionally valid only if governed by "standard criteria" set forth in law enforcement procedures. See Bertine,
¶ 23. Asboth's argument turns on language at the end of the Bertine opinion. Although Bertine generally focused on the constitutionality of an inventory search of Bertine's van, the Court concluded by ad
¶ 24. A split exists among the federal courts of appeals regarding Bertine's impact on impoundments by officers performing community caretaker functions. Several circuits agree with Asboth, to varying degrees, that law enforcement officers may constitutionally perform a warrantless community caretaker impoundment only if standard criteria minimize the exercise of their discretion. See United States v. Sanders,
¶ 25. In contrast, three federal circuits do not afford dispositive weight to the existence of standardized criteria or to law enforcement officers' adherence thereto, instead treating such criteria as, at most, one factor to consider when assessing the Fourth Amendment reasonableness of a warrantless community caretaker impoundment.
¶ 26. Most persuasively, the First Circuit explained in United States v. Coccia,
Virtually by definition, the need for police to function as community caretakers arises fortuitously, when unexpected circumstances present some transient hazard which must be dealt with on the spot. The police cannot sensibly be expected to have developed, in advance, standard protocols running the entire gamut of possible eventualities. Rather, they must be free to follow "sound police procedure," that is to choose freely among the available options, so long as the option chosen is within the universe of reasonable choices. Where ... the police have solid, non-investigatory reasons for impounding a car, there is no need for them to show that they followed explicit criteria in deciding to impound, as long as the decision was reasonable.
¶ 27. We agree with the First, Third, and Fifth Circuits that in cases involving warrantless community caretaker impoundments the fundamental question is the reasonableness of the seizure. Accordingly, we hold that the absence of standard criteria does not by default render a warrantless community caretaker impoundment unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment reasonableness standard. Nor does law enforcement officers' lack of adherence to standard criteria, if they exist, automatically render such im-poundments unconstitutional.
¶ 28. The absence of a standard criteria requirement does not, as Asboth suggests, imbue law enforcement officers with "uncontrolled" discretion to impound vehicles at will as a pretext for conducting investigatory inventory searches. As the First Circuit observed in Coccia, under the reasonableness standard, "a police officer's discretion to impound a car is sufficiently cabined by the requirement that the decision to impound be based, at least in part, on a reasonable community caretaking concern and not exclusively on 'the suspicion of criminal activity.'" Coccia,
¶ 29. Finally, our conclusion that Bertine does not mandate adoption of or adherence to standard impoundment criteria for all circumstances should not discourage law enforcement agencies from developing general impoundment procedures. "[A]doption of a standardized impoundment procedure . . . supplies a methodology by which reasonableness can be judged and tends to ensure that the police will not make arbitrary decisions in determining which vehicles to impound." Smith,
f 30. Under the third step of Wisconsin's community caretaker test, we evaluate the reasonableness of the law enforcement officer's exercise of a bona fide community caretaker function by "balancing [the] public interest or need that is furthered by the officer's conduct against the degree of and nature of the restriction upon the liberty interest of the citizen." Kramer,
(1) the degree of the public interest and the exigency of the situation; (2) the attendant circumstances surrounding the seizure, including time, location, the degree of overt authority and force displayed; (3) whether an automobile is involved; and (4) the availability, feasibility and effectiveness of alternatives to the type of intrusion actually accomplished.
Id., ¶ 41 (quoting State v. Kelsey C.R.,
f 31. Taking the third factor first, we note that evaluation of a car's impoundment necessarily involves an automobile. This factor enters the analysis because "[i]n some situations a citizen has a lesser expectation of privacy in an automobile." State v. Anderson,
¶ 32. Turning to the public interest advanced by the impoundment, we circle back to the effect of Asboth's arrest on the storage facility's owner and customers: The public has a significant interest in law enforcement officers seizing from private property a vehicle that, if left unattended, would inconvenience the property's owner and users by impeding beneficial use of the property and creating a potential hazard— particularly when the officers are in lawful custody of the car. See Brown,
¶ 33. The circumstances surrounding the im-poundment also reflect the seizure's reasonableness. If abandoned by the officers, the car would have intruded on private property owned by a third party who had nothing to do with the arrest. And because Asboth was already under arrest at the time of the impoundment, officers did not make an improperly coercive show of authority to effect the seizure. See Kramer,
¶ 34. Notably, the fact that both policies actually cabined the officers' exercise of discretion also indicates that the officers acted reasonably when seizing Asboth's car. In Clark, the court of appeals disapproved of a policy permitting officers to tow a vehicle if "[the] vehicle is to be towed and the owner/driver is unable to authorize a tow."
¶ 35. Finally, the lack of realistic alternatives to impoundment further reinforces the reasonableness of the seizure. Asboth was alone at the storage facility, so he did not have a companion who could immediately take possession of the car. Admittedly, the officers did not offer Asboth the opportunity to make arrangements for moving his car after his arrest, but nothing required them to do so. See United States v. Arrocha,
¶ 36. Considering all of these factors together, we conclude that law enforcement's removal of an unattended car that would otherwise create a potential hazard while also inconveniencing owners and users of private property
IV. CONCLUSION
¶ 37. "The touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is reasonableness." State v. Tullberg,
By the Court. — The decision of the court of appeals is affirmed.
Notes
Subsequent investigation revealed that the registered owner sold the car to Asboth, but neither Asboth nor the former owner notified the Department of Transportation of the transfer. Because of this omission, the officers did not know at the time of the arrest that Asboth actually owned the car.
See Wis. Stat. § 943.32(l)(b) and (2), § 939.50(3)(c), and § 939.62(l)(c) (2015-16).
The Honorable John R. Storck, presiding.
See also People v. Torres,
See also People v. Shafrir,
Although in this case we discuss the standard impoundment criteria while assessing the reasonableness of the seizure, nothing in this opinion forecloses Wisconsin courts from considering officers' adherence to standard criteria when determining whether officers exercised a bona fide community caretaker function.
Because we conclude that the seizure complied with both departments' impoundment procedures, we need not decide which procedures actually governed.
The clear absence of feasible alternatives to impounding Asboth's car further distinguishes this case from State v. Clark,
The array of factors demonstrating the reasonableness of the officers' decision to impound Asboth's car defeats any argument that this opinion delineates a per se rule "justifying] the seizure of every vehicle after its driver has been arrested." Dissent, ¶ 76. As with any warrantless community caretaker search or seizure, law enforcement officers acting as bona fide community caretakers may impound an arrested person's vehicle without a warrant only if the facts establish a
Dissenting Opinion
¶ 38.
(dissenting). The majority bucks the nationwide trend when it determines that the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution does not require that police follow standardized procedures during a community caretaker impoundment. Adopting the minority rule followed by three federal circuits, it reasons that standardized procedures are unnecessary because police
f 39. Compounding its misdirection, the majority further errs by expanding an already bloated community caretaker exception to the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement. It appears that yet again this court's "expansive conception of community care-taking transforms [it] from a narrow exception into a powerful investigatory tool." State v. Matalonis,
¶ 40. Contrary to the majority, I would follow the national trend as illustrated by the well-reasoned approach of the Tenth Circuit in U.S. v. Sanders,
f 41. Applying the Sanders test, I conclude that the warrantless impoundment of Asboth's vehicle violated his Fourth Amendment rights. His vehicle neither obstructed traffic nor created an imminent threat to public safety. Additionally, the standardized policies here fail to place any meaningful limits on police discretion and the asserted rationale for the community caretaker impoundment is unreasonable.
f 42. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
HH
¶ 43. The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that "[t]he right of the
¶ 44. In Gant, the United States Supreme Court expanded motorists' privacy rights when it narrowed its prior decision in New York v. Belton,
¶ 45. The Gant court explained that "[c]onstruing Belton broadly to allow vehicle searches incident to any arrest would serve no purpose except to provide a police entitlement, and it is anathema to the Fourth Amendment to permit a warrantless search on that basis." Id. at 347. Accordingly, Gant limited searches incident to arrest to two circumstances: either when the arrestee is unsecured and within reaching distance of the passenger compartment at the time of the search or when it is reasonable to believe that evidence relevant to the crime of arrest might be found in the vehicle. Id. at 343.
f 46. In order to address the same concerns in the context of vehicle impoundments, the national trend has been to adopt a two-part test that resembles Gant's narrowing of Belton. This test, like the test adopted in Gant, prioritizes motorists' privacy rights over deference to police discretion. It limits police
¶ 47. The question of whether a community caretaker impoundment of a vehicle must be governed by a standardized policy is an issue of first impression in Wisconsin. However, the United States Supreme Court has instructed that the exercise of police discretion must be "exercised according to standard criteria and on the basis of something other than suspicion of evidence of criminal activity." Colorado v. Bertine,
f 48. A majority of federal and state appellate courts that have addressed this issue have concluded that a warrantless community caretaker impoundment is constitutional only if there exists standardized criteria limiting police discretion. See, e.g., United States v. Sanders,
¶ 50. According to the majority, "the fundamental question is the reasonableness of the seizure." Majority op., ¶ 27. It contends that the absence of standard criteria does not "imbue law enforcement officers with 'uncontrolled' discretion to impound vehicles at will as a pretext for conducting investigatory searches." Majority op., ¶ 28. However, as set forth in more detail below, that is exactly what happened here.
¶ 51. The Tenth Circuit's decision in Sanders is illustrative of the national trend. In Sanders, for "reasons not articulated in any policy, [police] impounded a vehicle lawfully parked in a private lot after arresting its driver as she exited a store." Id. at 1242. The police made "no meaningful attempt to allow the driver, her companion, or the owner of the parking lot to make alternative arrangements." Id.
¶ 52. Sanders acknowledged that "[t]he authority of police to seize and remove from the streets vehicles impeding traffic or threatening public safety and convenience is beyond challenge." Id. at 1244 (quoting South Dakota v. Opperman,
f 53. After surveying United States Supreme Court and federal circuit precedent, Sanders concluded that "impoundment of a vehicle located on private property that is neither obstructing traffic nor creating an imminent threat to public safety is constitutional only if justified by both a standardized policy and a reasonable, non-pretextual community-caretaking rationale." Id. at 1248.
f 54. Deviating from the nationwide trend, the majority limits motorists' privacy rights. Contrary to the majority, I would follow the national trend protecting motorists' privacy rights under the Fourth Amendment and require both a standardized policy that limits police discretion and a reasonable community caretaker rationale.
A
f 55. Applying the test set forth above, I turn to the question of whether the policies in this case sufficiently limited officer discretion to impound vehicles from private lots.
Any officer having a vehicle in lawful custody may impound said vehicle. The officer will have the option not to impound said vehicle when there is a reasonable alternative; however, the existence of an alternative does not preclude the officer's authority to impound.
¶ 57. Likewise, the Dodge County Sheriffs Department policy governing impoundment provides that deputies are authorized to tow when "the driver . . . has been taken into custody by a deputy, and the vehicle would thereby be left unattended." Additionally, it states that unless otherwise indicated, "the deputy always has the discretion to leave the vehicle at the scene and advise the owner to make proper arrangements for removal."
¶ 59. According to the majority, both policies cab-ined the officers' discretion because they limit im-poundment "to situations where officers had custody of, respectively, the vehicle itself or its driver." Majority op., ¶ 34. After concluding that the standardized policies in this case are sufficient, the majority determines that "[t]he fact that the seizure did actually comply with the policies of the acting law enforcement agencies indicates that this impoundment was not an arbitrary decision but a reasonable exercise of discretion." Majority op., ¶ 33.
¶ 60. The majority errs because neither policy limits police discretion. First, it is unclear how the Beaver Dam policy, which allows impoundments whenever officers have custody of a vehicle, provides any limitation at all. How can the police impound a vehicle without having custody of it? The policy's directive is circular.
¶ 61. Second, the majority errs because the Dodge County policy limits police discretion only when a driver is not in custody. The Fourth Amendment's protections against warrantless seizures of property continue to apply after a driver has been arrested. Indeed, the question of whether standardized procedures are required has arisen in such seminal cases as Bertine only after the defendant has been arrested. See, e.g., Bertine,
f 63. The purpose of standardized criteria is to establish why or when a vehicle may be taken into custody, but here neither policy offers any guidance on this question. In State v. Clark, the court of appeals addressed the Milwaukee Police Department towing policy, explaining that when a policy offers no insight into why or when a vehicle may be seized, it is "wholly unhelpful."
¶ 64. Neither policy limits officer discretion "in deciding whether to impound a vehicle, leave it at the scene, or allow the arrestee to have it privately towed." Sanders,
f 65. Accordingly, the policies in this case, as in Sanders, "insufficiently limited officer discretion to impound vehicles from private lots." Sanders,
B
f 66. Having determined that the impoundment was not done in accordance with constitutionally sufficient standardized policies, I could end my analysis here because a community caretaker impoundment is
f 67. The majority concludes that there are a number of "objective justifications for the impoundment" that establish the police had a bona fide community caretaker purpose. Majority op., f 21. Initially, it contends that if left unattended, Asboth's car would have "inconvenienced a private property owner and customers at the storage facility by impeding the beneficial use of the property." Majority op., f 18. Yet, the hearing testimony demonstrates that it was possible to "drive around" Asboth's vehicle, contradicting this rationale. Beneficial use of the property was not impeded because Asboth's vehicle was not blocking traffic through the storage facility.
¶ 68. Because of the lack of evidence that the vehicle was obstructing traffic at the storage facility, the majority offers a number of additional rationalizations. First, it advances that "any expense for removing the obstruction would have fallen to a private property owner uninvolved in the arrest." Majority op., ¶ 18. Next, it asserts that the police protected the vehicle and its contents from theft and that "Asboth no doubt would have been upset to learn that his personal property was stolen from the car." Majority op., ¶ 19. Finally, it contends that because the registered owner of the vehicle was someone other than Asboth, police were faced with the possibility of needing to make arrangements to return the vehicle to its registered owner. Majority op., f 20.
f 70. After dispensing with the majority's speculative justifications for its conclusion that this was a bona fide community caretaker function, I turn now to examine the reasonableness of the warrantless im-poundment. A reasonableness analysis calls for consideration of both "the degree of public interest and the exigency of the situation." State v. Pinkard,
¶ 71. In its analysis of reasonableness, the majority repeats the same justifications offered as support for its conclusion that the impoundment was a bona fide community caretaker function. Essentially, it contends that the public has a significant interest in impounding a vehicle that would "inconvenience the property's owner and users by impeding beneficial use of the property and creating a potential hazard." Majority op., f 32.
¶ 72. Even if the majority could sufficiently explain how Asboth's vehicle posed a potential hazard to public safety, it errs in stating that it need not consider the exigency of the situation. Id. Acknowledging that this was not an emergent situation, the majority simply omits this consideration from its analysis. Id. Instead, it considers only the public interest, which does not justify the seizure because Asboth's vehicle
¶ 73. Finally, I turn to the majority's argument that "the lack of realistic alternatives to impoundment further reinforces the reasonableness of the seizure." Majority op., ¶ 35. As set forth above, however, no alternatives to impoundment were considered so there is no evidence as to whether there were realistic alternatives to impoundment. Again, this is pure speculation on the part of the majority.
f 74. Considering the facts of this case, it appears that the impoundment may have been a pretext for an investigatory police motive. See, e.g., Sanders,
¶ 75. Just before the vehicle was impounded, Asboth was arrested on a probation warrant. The car was towed to a city police impound lot, where it was subsequently searched. During the search, police removed and held all items of apparent value, including a pellet gun that was found in the vehicle. The officers conducting the search testified that they considered it to be an inventory search, and conducted it according to their inventory search procedures. However, one officer conducting the search filled out a form indicating that it was done to obtain "evidence," rather than the other possible purposes listed on the form, including "abandoned," "parked in traffic" or "safekeeping."
¶ 76. Contrary to the majority, I conclude that the lack of a compelling public safety need to move Asboth's car suggests that the police were motivated by the investigation of the armed robbery in which he was a suspect. Not only are the rationales offered by
¶ 77. Thus, I conclude that the impoundment of Asboth's vehicle was unconstitutional. His vehicle was parked on private property, was not obstructing traffic and posed no imminent threat to public safety. Under such circumstances, in order to survive constitutional scrutiny, the impoundment must be justified by both a standardized policy that limits police discretion and a reasonable, non-pretextual community-caretaking rationale. Here there was neither.
II
¶ 78. Ultimately, I comment on what I and other members of this court have repeatedly warned: a broad application of the community caretaker doctrine "raises the specter that the exception will be misused as a pretext to engage in unconstitutional searches that are executed with the purpose of acquiring evidence of a crime." Pinkard,
¶ 79. I have previously voiced the concern that "today's close call will become tomorrow's norm." Id., ¶ 66. Over the years, that is exactly what has happened. In case after case, this exception to the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement has expanded well beyond the limits of a bona fide community caretaker function that is "totally divorced from the detection, investigation, or acquisition of evidence relating to the violation of a criminal statute." State v. Kramer, 2009
¶ 80. With today's decision, community caretak-ing has again become an end in itself, justifying warrantless impoundments so long as the police can articulate "a hypothetical community need." Matalonis,
¶ 81. Not only has the majority opinion lowered the floor by deviating from the national trend requiring standardized criteria, it also has opened a trap door so that the community caretaker exception may become bottomless. If the community caretaker im-poundment of Asboth's vehicle parked on private property can be justified due to inconvenience, would any warrantless seizure be unreasonable in this context? When an exception to the Fourth Amendment becomes the rule, the privacy rights of motorists do not receive the constitutional protections they deserve.
¶ 82. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
The parties disagree regarding which policy governed the impoundment, but as set forth below, this issue is not disposi-tive to my analysis because neither policy sufficiently limits police discretion.
The sheriffs department policy states in relevant part:
Deputies of the Dodge County Sheriffs Department are authorized to arrange for towing of motor vehicles under the following circumstances:
When any vehicle has been left unattended upon a street or highway and is parked illegally in such a way as to constitute a definite hazard or obstruction to the normal movement of traffic;
[[Image here]]
When the driver of a vehicle has been taken into custody by a deputy, and the vehicle would thereby be left unattended;
[[Image here]]
When removal is necessary in the interest of public safety because of fire, flood, storm, snow or other emergency reasons;
[[Image here]]
